Seattle Seahawks: Preseason Game 1 Roster Report

Russell Wilson stole the show in the Seattle Seahawks' preseason opener, and Matt Flynn was very efficient, leaving us to believe he should remain the starter going forward.

The 27-17 win over Tennessee was one of the cleanest preseason openers the Seahawks have played in years, which led Pete Carroll to tell 710 ESPN Monday that it means the team is now practicing at game speed and translating practice to the actual game.

Running Back

Washington looked fast, bursting 26 yards on his first three carries. The Turbinator showed good all-around skills, picking up the blitz well and catching three passes on top of his rushing duties (he gained just 24 yards on 10 carries, though).

Wide Receiver

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With half of the roster contenders out, guys like Golden Tate, Braylon Edwards and Deon Butler got their shots. Edwards led the way with two catches for 51 yards, including the acrobatic theft of a 39-yard bomb from Wilson for a touchdown. Edwards has always shown a knack for those plays (while booting the easy catches).

Tate and Butler each got a couple of balls thrown their way (Tate caught both and Butler caught one and drew a pass interference on one). Ben Obomanu was not involved.

The anticipated debut of Terrell Owens—along with the return of Sidney Rice, Doug Baldwin, Kellen Winslow and Ricardo Lockette—will cut into everyone's reps.

Tight End

It was promising to see Flynn find Zach Miller twice for 23 yards, but it was depressing to see Miller suffer another concussion to go with the one he had last season and the two he suffered in 2009.

Anthony McCoy continues to drop passes (key third-down drop), and Cam Morrah was invisible. But the guy who stepped up and could overtake both for the No. 3 spot is undrafted rookie Sean McGrath, who caught two passes. He's worth a longer look in the next two games.

Offensive Line

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The first unit of Russell Okung, Paul McQuistan, Max Unger, Deuce Lutui and Breno Giacomini was dominant on its two series.

The second unit of Frank Omiyale, Allen Barbre, Lemuel Jeanpierre, J.R. Sweezy, Alex Barron, et al., was decent, though not nearly as effective. (Omiyale and Barron lived up to their reputations by each getting called for a false start.)

Defensive Line

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All eyes were on new guys Jason Jones and Bruce Irvin, and both made an impact on a few plays. DTs Red Bryant, Brandon Mebane and Clinton McDonald all played well. This was a strength of the team last season, and it is only stronger this year.

It will be nice to see more of Irvin to figure out how much he will contribute this season.

Linebacker

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Rookie MLB Bobby Wagner played well in his debut, and these guys were all over the place in their three series. Veteran Barrett Ruud did not play, but it's hard to see him unseating Wagner for the starting middle spot even when he does return.

Heath Farwell showed his value as a backup, forcing and recovering a fumble and also nearly intercepting a pass. Korey Toomer and Mike Morgan both could have a chance to stick based on special-teams play.

Secondary

This unit picked up right where it left off last season, with Earl Thomas and Brandon Browner teaming to create a touchdown on the first play and Richard Sherman picking off a deep pass later.

These guys are just always around the ball, and they could challenge the vaunted 1984 secondary of Kenny Easley, Dave Brown, John Harris and Keith Simpson, which combined for 28 interceptions and five fumble recoveries and scored six touchdowns.

Marcus Trufant played well in his nickel role; if healthy, he offers great depth.